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For many countries which specialize in the production and export of raw materials
raw material wealth can become a »curse« when, instead of helping to overcome
underdevelopment it serves to consolidate it. However paradoxical this may seem
there is clear evidence of a connection between raw material wealth, massive inflows
of foreign currency, and poverty.
The resource wealth of raw material export economies in the Third World is
generally accompanied by a multiplicity of socio-economic pathologies, such as
distortions in the structure of resource allocation, injustices of distribution, and
concentration of wealth in a few hands. In addition, raw material economies are
prone to crisis, do not have stable institutions, and have no solution to the spread
of poverty. Their governments apply clientistic techniques to retain supporters,
foster the expectation among the population that it will be taken care of by the
state, and are frequently authoritarian.
Raw material wealth is a curse particularly in oil-producing countries, and
equally in Latin America and the oil exporting countries in the Persian Gulf. Saudi
Arabia, Kuwait, and the United Arab Emirates are very rich countries, with a high
per capita income, but nevertheless they are far from belonging among the developed
countries. Also as regards economic growth the performance of raw material
dependent economies is rather modest: the per capita growth rates of underdeveloped,
raw material rich, and raw material exporting states – particularly those with
non-renewable raw materials – have been clearly behind those of raw material
poor countries since the 1960s. Despite their raw material wealth and sometimes
considerable financial inflows they have not been able to lay the foundations for
development. Because raw material countries concentrate one-sidedly on the extraction
of raw materials they neglect the form of wealth creation which relies on
human efforts rather than nature’s bounty.
It doesn’t always have to be this way. The success stories of various raw material
rich countries which since the end of the nineteenth century have managed to escape
the »curse of abundance« point in this direction. A number of measures are
necessary to that end. For example, the destabilizing effects of the raw material
sector on the rest of the economy must be cushioned and a transfer of resources
set in train from the raw material sector to the economic sectors which meet the
needs of the majority of the population. The conditions must be put in place for
that through the reorganization and modernization of energy markets, among
other things. The strategic goal is a well-balanced, integrated, and dynamic economy
which has a developed domestic market and is internationally competitive.
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